MONTHLY CALEXDAU-IS75. APRIL. S j 3r T W T IP B I 1 2.3 4 5 -G 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 11 15 1G 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 21 25 2G 27 28 29 30 AGKICL'JrUKAL ASD DOMESTIC On Washing IJouse-Flants. Have a large pail or tub filled with warm soap suds; then, spreading the fingers and palm of the left haud over the soil in the pot, turn the branches topsy turvy into the warm soap-suds, swing the plant briskly in the water till every leaf has become compl-tclv saturated, then put it through a iail of" ilea-n water and rub each leaf will, the thumb and finger; give it a good shake and w hen dry return it to it 8 place in the window. The leaves of a plant are its lungs, each leaf being lurni.shrd with hundreds of minute spores w hence the plants breathe in car bon and exhale oxygen. The perspira tion of plants is smd to be seventeen times that of the human body. Jlany plants never bloom vn account of the accumulation of dust upon their leaves. A plant too larpc to be laid down la a tub, as above described, maybe syringed and each leaf rubbed clean with the linger and thumb, which arc better for this purpose than a brush or cloth. Jjand and Water. Chocolate Jelly Cake. One cup of butter, two cups of sugar, three and one half cups of Hour, four eggs, one cup of milk, two teaspoonfuls cream of tartar, one tcaspoonful of soda. I bake this very thin in a dripping pan; this makes two loaves, cutting in six pieces. For the jelly one cup of grated chocolate, one cup of sugar, one dessert-spoon of corn-starch, one-half cup of milk; put this in a tin pail, then in a pan of boil ing water; let it dissolve and cook like a b i'Led custard. Spread the cake w hile the chocolate is hot, using three layers, and then spread over the top. Potato chops. Iloil and mash some nice mealy potatoes, then with one or two well-beaten ergs make them into a p tste, work it well, dust it over with riour and roll out. Take some nice thin neck ol" mutton or lamb chops, carefully trim off' the fat, pepper and salt them on both sides, cut the paste into shape, cover over like a pun", pinch the edges and fry to a iiht brown; they look better if about an inch of the bane is left visible. Choked Cattle. To remove a potato or other obstructions from the throat of a. cow, or other animals: Draw the tongue from the mouth and pour a tea cup of melted lard down the throat. In a few minutes after throw a handful of fine salt far into the mouth, which will produce a cough and remove the obstruc tion. How to Cook Hog Ilrains. Boil them in water with salt to suit the taste until they are done. Drain the water oil, then add a small lump of butter; they are good. It is asserted that the chinch bug, as a rule, attacks only such corn as is grown on poor, thin and scantily manured soil. How to Keep House on a Small Salary. A clerk's wife sends us the following bit of experience, which may have for many of our readers an interest both timely and practical : After many years of married life passed in comparative aflluence reverses came, and my husband w as obliged to accept a situa'ion in a large city with a small salary of $K) per year. I "felt that this could sullice for our maintenance only by the exercise tf the strictest econ omy. A little over fifteen dollars a week! Howminy times I divided that iJOO by titty-two and tried to make it come out a little more! Still I deter mined to solve the problem of the day, namely: whether one couM keep house n a small salary, or whether boarding house life was a necessit-, as so many clerk-.' w ives assert. We had neither of us been accustomed to economizing, and I felt it was but just, if my husband worked hard for his salarv, that I should perform the labor of making it go as far as possible. Thirty replies were received to our ad vertisement for two unfurnished rooms, without board. Looking them over care fully I selected half a dozen which came within onr menns nd started on an ex ploring expedition. In a pleasant house and neigh Uorhood I found a lady willing to rent two adjoining rooms, with closets and wter conveniences, for tte modest sum of twelve dollars per mon'h. In one room there were two deep south win dows where 1 could keep a few plants in the winter. 1 consulted my husband, and with his approval engaged the rooms. We hid $f73 ready money. With this we bought bright but inexpensive carpets, a parlor cook-stove, an oiled black walnut set of furniture, a table, a student-lamp, a few dishes and some coai. With the few pictures, a rack of book3 and some ornaments in our posses sion we decked the rooms tastefully, and commenced the serious business of keep ing house on $S(X) per year. We deter mined from the first that we would not have any accounts, but would pay cash for everything, and. when we could not afford an article do without it. After paying rent and washerwoman we had $50 per month for other expenses. Twen ty dol.ars of this furnished us a plentiful supply of food and paid car fare. 1 learned te love my work. Strength came with - each day's labor, and renewed health repaid each ellbrt put lorth to make my little home pleasant and rest ful to my husband. And how we did en joy that little home! ; When the stormy nights came we drew our curtains, shutting out the world, with a bright fire and the soft glow of our reading-lamp upon the crimson cloth, reading a magazine or evening paper (in which we were able to indulge), with a "(fod pity the poor this dreadful ninhtJ forgetting in our cozy and comfortable home how many there were in the great ity who would call us poor. We al wavs kept within my husband's salary, wear ing plain but good and respectable clothing, and eating simple but substan tial food. And now, as circumstances have been improving with us, and we are living in a house all our own, with ser vants, and thousands instead of hundreds a year, we look back to the year spent in our simple, trucrai little home, and know that it will always be the happiest por lion of our lives. Scribner's Monthly. Wheeler & Wilson's Sewing Machines. We call attention to the Wheeler fc Wilson advertisement in our columns. This well-known Company has the most advantageous facilities for supplying the public with Sewing Machines, on as favor- o di f or rr a o o t Tk ?- 1 1 1- T nnta vrill nilin ijaKj 1-I U13 AO w II V L7 U.S 1 U .3 V 111 ailVn They warrant all their work, and it is a matter of importance to the purchaser to ileal with a Company w hose position and permanence give assurance that their guaranty will be fulfilled. They have agencies and offices throughout the civil ized world for furnishing needles, thread and other necessary supplic-s, and have an established reputation for reliability ind fair dealing. If you are thinking of going to Alaska, 3'oung man, it will be valuable information to tell you the probable cost of the wife of your buzzum if you get out the: e. latest mantel reports in dicate that a Teal nice squaw can be ob t dned for one thousand yards of calico, four camphor-wood boxes, fourteen old rr.uskets and sixty blankets. One of thoif dirty daughters of nature recently went at that price. Every pound of cochineal contains '0,000 insects boiled to death. CALLING TUE DEAD. My little child, so sweet a voice might wake So weet a sleeper for so sweet a sake. ' Calling your buried brother back to you, You laugh and listen till I listen too! tviiv WaiiA listen? It mav be to hear Knnnil'tnoriivin to reach rnv troubled ear. Wh v does be laugh It may be he can see The" face that only tears can hide from me. Poor babv faith so foolish or so wise! vim num.. I hatx nut of forlornest cries He sreaks fis with a bird's or blossom's hreath How fair tbe knowledge Is that kuows not Death! Ah, fools and blind through all the piteous years Searchers of stars and rraves bow many seers, f'Allinfr thp dad and peeking for a sicrn. IIvr liiiisrh, d and listened like this child of mine? Mrs. H. M. B. Piatt, in Atlantic Monthly. THE LOST CHIMES. BY FIIAKZ MELVILLE. Soon after entering the pastorate was ordered bv mv superiors to thor oughly revise the parish register, kept in the old church of Holtug. It was a very tedious job, and one that kept me sev eral weeks closely confined in tbe gloomy sacristy, poring over the dusty tomes that recorded the bitths, baptisms, mar riages and deaths of several bygone gen erations. 5Iy co-worker was the aged sexton, whose name was Christen llyer pope, a man well Known to every man, woman and child within twenty miles around. He was a remarkably reserved, reticent old man, who never ventured a remark except in answer to a direct question from me. One day in going through the marriage register 1 suddenly came to a pace where there seemed to be a very ugly hiatus in tbe records. 'Christen," said I, "what does this mean?" A very peculiar expression came over the old man's wrinkled face, and I no ticed him tremble slightly as he replied sententiously, " I hereby hangs a tale. "A tale!" I exclaimed. "Bravo! let us have it then, by all means." The old man hung his head for several minutes in deep and silent meditation. then, raising it suddenly, went on to tell me the following narrative, which I can not hope to give in his peculiarly im pressive style and manner, but which is in substance as follows: 1 have been employed about churches ever since I was a iittle boy; in other words, for nearly three-score years most oi that time in the cnurcn under wbich we are now sitting. The friends of my youth one by one passed away, so si lently, and their places were supplied by others so quietly and gradually, that it was not until a few years ago that 1 dis covered, to my astonishment, that the world had passed into an entirely new set of hands. In other words, I discov ered that I had outlived my own genera tion. The story which I am about to tell you is not properly a ghost story, and still less is it a love story. I have been a bachelor all my days, and do not care to go DacK to tne event that determined tms. in an mynte l nave never seen a real ghost, though it does seem to me mat it tne spirits or tne departed ever " revisit the pale climpsej of the moon,' and r how themselves to mortal eyes, I ought certainly to have been the one to see them. I am not a bit superstitious, sir, not a on. One Christmas Eve. shortly after I had been made sexton, the pastor came over to visit me, and I could see that he was somewhat agitated. Said he: " Christen, I'm in a fix. The bell-ringer has been taken down suddenly ill is sick abed and I've got nobody to peal the chimes to-night. He said that you were the only man wno could do tne thing properly!" j ne iact is, it nad Deen a habit ot nunc invariably to spend my Christmas Eves with the bell-ringer of the Holtug cnurcn. lie was a man much older than I, who was getting to feel his years very perceptibly. He had a very pretty daughter, and she seemed always par ticularly fond of my company. I thought it but a small return for his manifold Kindnesses to me to assist him peal the chimes, which, by the way, is not a job for everybody's doing. Under these circumstances, without the least hesitation, I promised the pastor that I would be responsible myself, that just as soon as the clock struck tbe hour of twelve the Holtug chimes should peal far and wide over the land, as they had always done, from beyond the memory of the oldest inhabitant of the parish. For this he thanked me warmly,, and then departed. As soon as he was gone I went over to the bell-ringer's to get the tower keys, and also some necessary directions. I found him so ill that I determined to spend the remainder of the evening with him. At precisely half-past eleven I stuck the heavy bunch of keys in my belt and started out. The wind was blowing strong and cold and the night was dark as pitch. A number of the street-lamps had gone out for the want of oil, and others had been extinguished by the violent gusts of wind that made them creak and rattle. Not a soul semed astir in the desolate streets, and yet several times I thought that I heard footsteps close behind me. Without paying much attention to this fact I passed on, and yet I could not be mis taken; there were stealthy footsteps just behind me. I was experiencing the full force of this uncanny feeling, when sud denly a party of young people, singing a Christmas carol, turned the corner and also the drift of my thoughts. I stopped with them several minutes to exchange the greeting of the season and then bade them good-night. This made me forget all about the suspicious footfalls that I fancied I had heard. When I reached the church-yard gate the clock struck a quarter to twelve, and just as I got inside of thb gate I thought I heard the same muffled, guarded tread. I now felt pretty sure that some one was secretly following me. Suddenly I turned around and looked back, but never a sound save the wind in the trees and tomb-stones, and the faint vibrations of the belfry clock's last quarter-stroke; never a sight but the dark, low, scudding ciouds, me DiacK, gloomy cnurcn, and the countless white tombstones. To tell the truth I was both too ashamed and too frightened to go back and see if anybody was really dogging me. I was rapidly becoming a coward. The only way I could account for it was by supposing mat, me nara wont or me previous nicht had superinduced a temporary fit of weak nerves, rear and superstition. Despite, however, my earnest efforts to Danish the unpleasant emotions produced by the stealthy footsteps, when 1 came to tit the big key into the lock of the outer church-door an irre.-istible im pulse compelled me to look back over my shoulder. As I said be fore, 1 was not a bit superstitious, and as a general thing my nerves were not particularly weak, but the unpleasant and disagreeable sensa tion that thrilled through me was one never to be forgotten and not easily de scribed. I could not tell whether it was the face of a man or a ghost that I saw peering so straight at me from just over the top of a gravestone near by. My eyes encountered other eyes. It could have been no apparition, for it was too distinct, the headstone being scarce thirty yards distant. It could have been no fleeting vision, for I was standing in the deep shadows of the church portal, and could watch the face move slightly without its being able to see that I was watching it. The tombstone behind which the body to which the face belonged was concealed stood some distance off from the path. A ft elicg of anger soon gained the predom inance within my agitated bosom, and banished all other feelings. I made a rapid da at the stone, intending, with my bunch of heavy keys to spoil this grinning face. But before I reached the spot the head had vanished. I was utterly astonished. Just then the moon broke'through the ragged, rifted clouds, and. Jookine ud. I saw both hands of the clock pointing al most to the hour of twelve. I Knew that the next minute the iron voice of the spire would proclaim the midnight hour, and the thought of my promise came over me. I ran back to the door, but found it impossible (stand in whatever position I might) to bring the tombstone and the obelisk in the same line of vis ion, and thus explain the phenomenon of the grinning face. So, after all, 1 had not been deceived. I now opened the door of the church as quickly as possible, slipped in, closed it with a bang after me, and then began to grope my way down the narrow side aisle. The darkness in the church was so intense that I could not see an arm's length ahead of me, and my matches and lantern were stowed away in the sac risty. 1 was soon feeling for the key-hole of the ironclad door that separated the sacristy from the body of the church. The key-hole found, the next thing was to'pick out the right key from the huge bunch that hung by my side. This done, I found no difficulty in fitting it into the lock. Before turning it I paused a mo ment to listen. Death-like stillness reigned supreme. One! It was the iron voice of the big clock overhead that broke the silence in such an awful manner that my heart jumped in my bosom like a frightened bird in its ca?e. Two! A peculiar feeling, that succeeded the startle, begin to creep over me as I stood there in the utter darkness that seemed tingling and vibrating with the jarring blows of tbe midnight hour. Three! The atmosphere of the old church was damp and moldy, and smelt like the air of an unsunned vault. Four! A horrible feeling of faintness came over me, and a humming in my head like the buzzing of a swarm of bees. I put forth a great effort and listened more carefully. Five! Then the sound seemed to resolve it self into that confused rattling of ropes and pulleys which precedes immediately the ringing of tells. Six! I was dreadfully puzzled to account for this sound. I knew the bell-ringer was not up in the tower, for l had left him home sick in bed. Seven ! Besides, 1 had the bellry keys in my belt, and how could anyone have gained accss there without them? Eight! By this time the giddy sensation had passed away and I had begun to chide myself for my delay and for being such an arrant coward. Nine! How foolish to imagine myself fol lowed, peeped at from behind a tomb stone, or hearing strange noises in the church. Ten! The wind, said I, often makes very strange and remarkable noises about the towers and angles and windows of an old, dilapidated building. Eleven! And Holtug Church wao a rare instru ment for that famous old musician to play upon. Twelve! "The last stroke of midnight found me standing thus debating before the sacristy door, instead of being up in the belfry, ready to pull, pull with a vim, and pull with might and main as soon as it had died away. I knew that there was not a moment more to lose. What was I to do? My unfulfilled promise now seemed to lash me on. I knew that at that very in stant hundreds of ears were eagerly strained to catch those chimes that until now had never before failed to proclaim: " 1'eace on earth, good-will to men. I soon succeeded in lighting the candle and sticking it in the lantern. But at best it gave a miserably poor light, be cause the thick yellow horn sides were rendered semi-opaque by dirt. 1 put some billets of wood under one arm, and holding the lantern alofi I started for the belfry. Just as I was shutting the sacristy door behind me a heavy hand grasped my arm. I shrank back and exclaimed, " Who's that?" The lantern dropped to the Door and the light was extinguished, leaving me and tne unknown person in total darkness. The only way the latter answered my question was by seizing both of mv arms from behind and with great force attempting to keep them firm ly against my back. As soon as the men had lit the lantern, one of them came up to me and said in a harsh, firm voice, "Give me the keys!" lou can taKe tnem," said l, "as l am not in a condition very well to refuse you. All you nave to do is to take them from my belt. I am as heir less as a baby and cau't prevent you." lhe man then took the keys from my belt. Said I, "I can cheerfully volunteer the information that all tbe church treasures are in safe keeping in the village, and that with the exception of a few bottles of sacramental wine and a few rat gnawed wax-candles, there's nothing in the church worth the trouble ot vour stealing." Danger sometimes makes us very pre sumptuous, and I suppose there must have been something galling in my tone that irritated them, lor the elder or the two, a short, thick-set man. demanded of me, with a harsh voice and a fearful im precation, where the parish registry was kept. This was an unexpected question, and to it 1 remained silent. He then repeated the question with an oath, and could see that he was getting mad Said I, after a pause, " I shall not tell j-ou where they are, ror great misuse could be made of the books." " Come. wncre are inose dooks? said ne, in a very threatening manner. ' You have mistaken your man," was all I. said in reply. " One!" I sat and listened. Time seemed sud denly rolled back, and my whole life was nashed Detorc me. m the agony of mv desperate situation l lined a condensed and passionate prayer to God for deliv erance or salvation. "Two!" I felt the muscles of that portion of the scalp against which the cold muz zle of the pistol pressed twitching fear fully. Death never stood so near me before. It was a moment of higher ex citement and darker and deeper agita tion of the soul than any that 1 had ever hitherto known, or care ever again to experience. Three!" Notwithstanding death stared me so grimly in the face I deteimincd to accept it ratfcer than break a vow, made in the very sanctuary of God a sin that I thought woul' Vine a more fearful curse upon me than auy death could do. No! with my teeth set hard together, and my soul braced to meet my expectant fate, I sat and listened to the slow, mechanical words, as they fell from the lips of my cruel captor, and w hen he said Three! I muttered : " I defy you, death!" He saw it was no use. lie had extort ed an answer, but it was not the one he wanted. He laid the pistol back again upon the table, and began trying, one by one, the iron doors of the vaults. At last he found the vault which contained the register. They then piled all the books on the table, blind-folded me, and began their search. Presently they car ried all the books back to the vaults ex cept two, the two marriage registers, in which every marriage for fifty years past was recorded. They were a long time finding what they wanted. Present ly the younger one siid: "Look at this!" and both of them gazed steadily and silently awhile, .as if reading what was there written. They then exchanged rapid looks and a few whispers, whereupon the elder tore out at least half a dozen leaves and put them over the candle flame. Before they had caught the flame the younger snatched them away from his partner, tore them across twice, and stuffed the fragments into his coat-pocket. They now began to make hasty prep arations for leaving, as if, after having accomplished their designs, they were anxious to get away. They passed out of the sacristy, leav ing the door ajar behind them, then through the church, leaving the door o' the church ajar also, then down the ave nue and eo out of sight Just then the clock in the tower pealed out the hour one! "One," said I, in amazement, "has all this been crowded into one hour?" It was even so, sir, and you have now beard the simple story of how those leaves came to be missing from the marriage register. Here the old sexton paused, but I had become so deeply interested in his recital that I begged him to go on and tell me how the affair terminated. lie resumed: Well, you may think that the worst part of my advenure was past, but I soon found out that my mis eries had just begun. My physical agonies were sufficient to quell tbe strongest will, but when the element of soul terror was added my misery became simply infernal. It would have been a great mitigation of my sit uation if 1 could only have shut the sa cristy door, which seemed to me to be the peep-hole into the world of the dis embodied and the unhappy. From one, until quarter-past two, I sat thus, filled with mortal pain, and wrapped in spiritual fear. these latter ter rors that worked upon the soul were seven-fold more awful than were those moments when I was expecting physical death at the hands of the robber. Now, I know wery well that those fiendish faces which mocked me were nothing else than the creation of my own brain, the cheats of a distraught imagination; but they were none the less terrible. I could not drive them away at will, and for the time they were to me realities, palpable ab extra existences. After a while I perceived a small light flickering in the remote end of the church, and when it came neater I heard faint footsteps. For a moment I hoped that this was some one come to look after me, but the hope was evanescent. as I had been so often deluded during the past two hours. But, sure enough, there came a voice, no ghostly sound such as I had been hearing, but a warm human voice. It was the anxious call of the good pastor, who cried three times aloud "Christen, Christen, where are you?" The voice broke the dread spell which bound me. " Here in the sacristy," I cried back feebly. The next instant the pastor came throuch the sacristy door holding the lantern high above his head You may imagine his amazement and surprise to see me sitting stark, almost lifeless, tied to the chair and wild with terror. "Quick! quick!" I gasped, "cut these accursed cords and give me wine or I shall d " 1 he wine soon restored me to consciousness and I found the pastor was cutting the cords that had become buried in my very Uesh. He wrapped me warmly and hastened to the village for help, as I had to be carried home When I was comfortable in bed I related to him the adventure which I have just told you. He said alter the midnight strokes he had waited to hear the chimes and that he greatly wondered at not hearing them, for, said he, " Christen, I knew you were a man to keep your word. I lay awake, for I could not sleep. ''Then it occurred to me that you had gone alone, and fearing that some accident had befallen you I arose, dressed and hastened to the church." I verily believe, sir, that had he left me until morning they would have found me as Schiller s lovelorn Knight of loggen burg was tound one morning since L.eichedo a stark, sitting corpse. Eighteen months after the adventure the pastor sent me word that he had a clew. It was in the shape of a Copen hagen newspaper, containing a card re questing the pastors of every congrega tion in the country to search for the marriage records of a Mr. Tonneson Uur pastor telt sure that Mr. lonneson's marriage records would never be pro duced, but both he and 1 were certain that it was the very same which the young masked villain had stuffed in his breast-pocket eighteen months before The pastor set ott immediately for Co penhagen. Several da's thereafter I re cei ved a letter from him, saying : " Come on immediately, I have struck a hot trail." I lost no time in reaching C, and, sure enough, we were soon on a hot trail. The pastor had spotted the suspected parties, and the detectives, to use a technical term, "were shadowing them." The moment they were pointed out to me I instantly recognized one of them, notwithstanding they were masked at the time of their crime. The moment 1 heard him speak I could have taken an oath that he was the identical individual who had put the pistol to my head, and who had tied me in the chair, to leave me to those horrors which I have feebly attempted to de scribe-to you. He was immediately ar rested and imprisoned. On his trial he was convicted, At mat time it was a capital offense to destroy public records, and he may consider himselt fortunate to have escaped the death penalty for lite labor in the penal colony. I his sub stitution he gained by turning evidence against his employer and accomplice, the younger villain, who it appears gave the detectives the slip, and escaped to America, the land ot the free and the asylum for Europe's outlaws. As we had surmised, the object of their crime was to cheat Mr. lonneson s heirs out of a large fortune, by destroying the proots ot their legitimacy, and pressing me spurious next claims of the younger villain as the nearest relative. In spite, however, of the missing records, the lawyers managed to bring order out of chaos, and confirm to the rightful heirs, a uaugnter and two sons, their own Inland Magazine. A Flrst-CIM Firm. From the Grand Rariids ( Mich.1 E a trie. The celebrated advertising agencv of S. M. Pcttengill Jk Co. is one of the most colossal business institutions in the country, and its central office at 37 Park row, New York city, opposite the Citv Hall Park and the new Post- otnee building, is an establishment a stranger ought to visit It be really desires to 6ee all the lions when he visits Oreat Uotham. ir. Pcttengill, the bead of the firm, was trained to his business under the " master of the trade," is a practical printer and publisher, is a man of hitrh moral character, of marked business talent, and possesses tbe strictest honor and integrity, llence in the quarter of century ana a little more that he has been in busi ness be has built up the largest business of the kind in the country or the world. ueie gan business in Boston In 1S49; in lWihe went to New York to start a second office, re taining his interest in his Boston otlice, and since that time he has remained in New York. In 1873 be started a branch office in Phila delphia, which is a most successful institution, a great advantage to business men, though not by any means so larsre and important a business house as the New York agency. In all the time Mr. Pcttengill has been in business he has seldom or never had a dis pute with a customer or patrom Prompt in his payment to publishers, fully posted as to the needs of advertisers, possessing the con fidence of all the publishers in the country, and ot nearly all the business men who ad vertise, giving his business his constant per sonal attention, it is no wonder the firm of S. M. Pcttengill fc Co. stand at the head of their business. And advertisers who would make the most of their money, who would be suc cessful and prudent iu their advertising, can not ao better than patronize the nrm. fleeter & Wilson's Rotary-Hook Lock-Stitch mm Mmm SB MORE THAN OF THEin Fair Hn - A Quarter of a Centsry's Trial has DeiionstrateiTlieirSijeriority. Medical Advertisixo. The medical profession are outspoken in their de nunciation of the system of medical ad vertising, and declare that any medicine that is advertised is a fraud. How thor oughly inconsistent and unfair is such an argument. The men who are so loud in their criticisms are those who advertise themselves as medical aavan by ostenta tious display; splendid residences with massive door-plates; fast horses and costly carriages. Dr. J. Walker, of California, an old practitioner, respected alike for his skill and conscientious inde pendence, dares to differ; anil having dis covered in his Vinegar Bitters a pure ly herhalistic medicine, free from all spirituous poisons a wonderful specific lor numerous disorders, advertises the same for the relief of his fellow-man, and is borne out in his declarations of its many virtues by thousands of in valids who are being cured of disease by its use. ( in For All Female Complaint, yonnror old, married or sinarle. at the dawn of womanhood or the change of life, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription manifests such a positively remedial influence as to call forth the loudest praise from all who use it. Mr. Jons A. Kimzet, drugjrist, of Knob Nostcr, Mo., writes as follows: "Dr. Piekce, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir our medicines sell better than any other I keep and give universal satisfaction. The people are especially delighted with jour Fa vorite crcscription, ana it seems to be a la- vorite among all that have ever used it." It is sold by druggists and dealers in medicines. " WIIEELEIidb WILSON'S NEW NO 6 MACHINE must eventually supcrmle all otters now run with which it comes in compe tition. We recommend for it the Iiiywrf award which it t in the power cf the Inxti- tuie to oestow." r rom the unanimous ite- Eort of the five Judges of the American astitute, New York, 1874. 1 he Board of Managers unanimously ap proved the report, and recommended for this machine the Gobi Medal of the Institute. Tho Board of Direction "unanimously approved this recommendation, and awarded the Gold Medal to Wheeler & Wilson, the only gold medal awarded for a Sewing Machine by the American In stitute for many years. The Austrian Official Ilcport of the Vien. nn Exposition pronounced it " the marvel oj the Exposition" and added, " this universal machine sews the limviet leather harness and the. finest gauze with a truly pearl stitdi." 1 he brand Medal of 1'roqress teas award ed for it. IVhat the lcaliug fllannfaclurers of ISoot and Shoes Say ot WHEELER & WILSON'S Bronchitis, or Cnnoxic Sork Throat. It is attended with irritation of the bronchial tubes, which convey the air we breathe into the lungs. This irritation produces sore throat, hoarseness, cousrhing, and sometimes spitting of matter streaked with blood. If it is neglected it will extend down to the lungs, uuu eriucs uiui coiinrmcQ consumption. Al len's Luosr Balsam will be found a most val uable remedy for curing this disease, and pre- For sale by all Medicine Dealers. A Cure for Asthma. I see that some one, m your valuable paper, asks for a cure for asthma. 1 have been alllicted with that dreadful disease for forty-four years, and never found any relief until last summer. In iooKin over tne Journal ana Jlensenoer. one of your city papers. I saw a notice of " I). Langells' Asthma Cure. One trial tuckasre free." I sent and received bv return mail, aiid it gave me relief in five niiuutcs. Mv case w as one oi tne very worst. Do not fail to send for it. God bless D. Lanrells for his remedv. Mis aJdress is: " D. Lanirells. AppIa ('reek. avue iounty, emio. a Slusckibeh. kim.no si s, ind. The proprietors of 7biN,vn' Anodune Lini ment, I'aKom? J'urtatii-e nils and Sheridan's Lavalru tomJition Jvtoders have published readable and instructive pamphlet, which ui-jy ucuaarte oy mail. Gle.v Flora Mineral Water. AVrindprfni discovery; cures when all else fails. Write lor circular. K. JI. Parks. Waukegan. 111. T ' . - -. -. ni ris eu.iniAX. OI L,llertv. Jl. hart n stiff le;r, bent at the knee, limbered nnd strengthened by the use of Johnson's Anodyne . . Supreme Court has confirmed it.s in. junction against an imitation of the picnara. tion of itch Hazel, known as Pond's Extract. Pri'ssixg's White Wine Vinen-ar Works, m. fcuuiiaucu in are tne largest in the world. If you want the best Elastic Truss for rup ture, write to Pomeroy & Co., 744 B'd way, N. Y. Burnett's Cocoaine is the best and chenn- nc i : j i a i . cot uuir UICS51U1T iu me wona. SEWING MACHINE: We, manufacturers of boots and shoes, are using Wheeler & Wilson's New No. 6 Sewing Machine in all kinds of stitching on our work, and confidently believe that it will supersede all others in this branch of manufactures, for the following rea sons: 1. The work done by this machine is superior to that of any other in variety, amount, excellence and beauty. 2. This machine is more durablcihun any other of its class, requiring much less outlay for repairs and renewal of j)arts. A. It docs the cordina or stamna of button holes in a most elegant and substantial manner, without the expense of royalty, In short, because by the use of this machine we can turn ou.t superior work at less cost than with, any other. Signed oy many. ESIt is fast superseding all other ma chines for leather work. doit WHEELER & WILSON'S l HK NORTH WESTERN HORSH NATL CW's uniREiefl Nail is the best in the world. ti'fw t- tvj uio. 6TIKSOK Uo.. fori '.and. Muriiv VK pnnifi vrly pay our ry. TeniiBfrce. t'OHX rr nt a prtimlati-d la- cu., iox 140, Chicago. fi 2 O O J!"5.th-19 ;ont everywhere Addresa -fagoap. eroodafrec Chang Chang M'fg Co., Boston. I-T .K KA 11 1 1, V W.4 N TS IT, v in LOVELL, Erie. Ia. IVi A! T .rMI"n "nI Atenov.-Xo. l -nuu ijuci jut acre. i. a. $y A WKKK. 4 9 outfit c Farm liENT, V heaton. 111. And Yet He Is ot Happy. The vanity of human ambition, and the homilies of the preacher about the inability of fame or riches to confer hap piness, were never more strikingly con firmed than in the person of the most eminent political personage now living. One would think that nature and fortune had conferred everything on Prince Bis marck calculated to afford him boundless content, proud retrospect and the seren ity of happj' satiety. He may plume him self upon the conceded fact that, of all men living in the possession of power, he is the chief ; if there be a world-mover in this generation, it is he. A word from him would set a legion of a million and a halt of the best soldiers on the globe in motion; in one hour he is impressing his will on foreign courts, in the next he is waging a successful fight against the still mighty spiritual forces of Home. Czars and kaisers are even seeking to conciliate him. Wealth he has, and might have as much more as he wished, for tJerman gratitude to him who has made Germany a nation has no bounels. He has more than won the highest rank to which subject or statesman could aspire. He is blessed with a devoted JnmiJy, whom he loves, and who idolize him. In Berlin he is greater than the Emperor; in Pomera- nia he is a feuelal eJespot who needs no law to enlorce his authority, whoseyoke I . i i. r-. ft - ."W I l.r tllA . 1 1 , H jf ........ ..'. . Yet Bismarck, according to a Berlin let ter wri'er, is one of the unhappiest and most discontented or men. lie is har assed by the opposition ot the spectacled doctors of lhe Heichstag; the pet ty de tails of office worry and fret him chronic illness too often paralyzes his vast powers of body and mind. Every day's mails bring him letters threatening nisiue;and tuese tease though they do not frighten him, as a sick lion is teased by the perpetual biting of very small in sects. The police tell him to be careful; he lives ever in a sulphurous atmosphere of vague danger. Even power has grown nauseous to him. and adulation has ceased to give its sw cet sting of pleasure. He longs to abandon the scenes of his triumphs and troubles to get away from all this vorry ; will gladly let his name pass out of men's mouths if he can but get peace, and would fain exchange those things for which men so keenly envy him for the vines and fig-trees of remote Varzin. AppUton"s Journal. The Piano Harp Cabinet Orgaj? is a new invention, combining three and one- half octaves of a piano-forte, or of an in strument with tones between those of the piano and the harp, with the organ. It is a beautiful instrument, costing but little more than the organ. The Mason & Hamlin Organ Co. are notable to man ufacture it rapidly enough to supply the demand. a (rerun wanted everywhere. For rnucuoB vvalkib. Oarton. Ohio. MACHINE, Now for the first time introduced to the public, ranks in excellence with their famous No. G machine, but has some modifications adapting it to special class es of work. The Tailor will find it as well suited to his work as is No. 6 to leather work. It might properly be termed the Tailor's Machine. Send for Circular to Wieeler & Wilson Maniifact'rr Co., 44 Fourteenth St., New York. IOWA R. R. LAND CO. lias for ale 1 .300.000 Arm- of Railroad Lands la tne Middle iiepaon or csteru lowa. Better Lands at Cheaper Prices Than can be found elsewhere within civilization. "So praBshoppers. Koapie. No Indians. Areracrredit f rice o and W per acre. Start rijrht! Call or send to he Comn&jiv'H Ottipft. UrZ Rnnilnlnh itrvt. inH obtain full fnformatlor -and how to reaoh tho lands free. For maps and pamphlets, with prices and terms, address Iowa Iiailroad Land Co., Cuieago, or Cedar Kapids, Iowa. juilx xs. u.iuioi..iJana commissioner. 9.E!TfSlTI0 CARDS ny mall for 2f. Ad- w u urea tuub.i UOMBOM. 79 Jackson-st.. Chicago. 5 f C 1n! expense a month to apents. Afldress -Send for "rhrnmn'1 J.U.HU it'UiiD'S SOS S. Bos ton. WANTED 5OUO New AGENTS. fThe People's Dollnr Paper, TnK t'ov rmBUTOR, rntarue iot column, relijrious and secular. T'lkf erery, 'rhere. f niajrniflcent premium nin lile.tcrni8,etc..!'ree. J.H.Kurlr.lkiston C I A to S ir PER D VT iolrt KeKlon. Hook man now r(aiv. Mill ions can he sold, lioodspeed Puhlish'e House.Chlcago KLACIUIILLS LOOK HERE .FLOWERS READ THIS! (fcOA Dally to Asrcntn. R.T new articles and the fp-wvF best iaiuily l'ara-r in America, with two 3.U0 jeiree. ni t u CO.. bend 2o cents for ('atalosrue and 2 r ucntslas or i i.e- rnniums; orfl for 2 Fuchsias, 2 lieraninms. 1 a Verhcnns. 2 HasKci i-innts. . ir..- -r. 1 4 SONS, Flobistk, Box VJ'J, Pitts Br Eft h, ix Curomoel . aoo Ilroad way. K . Y. nnPV CT,!oOK" 25c. by mail. I UUnbl ieatner Imitation Knssis Vail, Ord &Cu.,Summit,N.J. BIKINI SllOII PPII PPQVorFITsr"re',nythenReofRoss,Ep- Pkio MONEY REOUIRED Cr ILtrO I ll.piic Kemediea. Trial Package 1 . V: lV VTL It V ZV o lirA CESSSSSSaFKKK. For circulars, evidence of sue- Until GOOCIS ATG OOlCl. X nil particulars anu fiimpio i res ou recrii w inp cent return Btamp. liefcrences: .Moore's Kural New Yorker anu ew lorn inyiwoK. j'iTHrnjiruiMnr. .Address lAA'roBTii & ili:isTot 6U? Broadway, :N. Y. SENT FREE A hook exposing the mysteries of T i T T trn and how anv one may operate ?! jl IJIJkllt aucceiwfully with a capital of S"iU or $I.MHI. Com plete Instructions and illustrations to any addrena. TI'.MIlItlDCiE Ss CO., BAJittiB3.aJDBKolLl3. 2 Wall street. Mew lork. ;um, etc., aUiiro KOSS BKOTHEIIS. Klchmond, Ind. kss Miew who use Printed Vmt 'fI Id write for prices to '"'- fcLL, LN bl.UI'1!. r ACTOKY, tvanslon. III. A arentn' Juide Tells who want Aeenta and what 1 for, anecdotes and iiiHtructionf. 8-naue monthly- til ctsayear postpaid. Jas. P.Scott, 15 Clark-st.Chicaeo. tiOAt PKlt IJ.W Commission or S30 n wrelcal- i.StJ ary, auu expenses. AVe oftcr It and will i,n v It. AntllVimw. Ml 1 ' .1... jt- M ' I - , - CUIUS. CATALOGUE TREE ! it ii no i, pi I co. 1013 i. 5thfcU.ST.lX)nis, Mo. B2501 MONTH A crenta wanted every where. Business honorable and flrst- las. Particulars sent free. Address JOHJT WOKH1 A CO. bt. Louis. Mo. nviianir- inrUTO Ladles or Uentle- nCLIMDLC HUCN I men. losell an ar ticle imitfipet sable to every lady s toilet. Large rofits, no rlk. M'nd s-crnt t tamp tor circulars ana .li. , Km tM rBTKU or Tunux tWT. rur trsrriiog Honor mtm It trtnkrler. Hu rrm iwiitim f bitnarlf (Brie 3& eta.) willraan! iLLmitMi innoffitto. Tb poor rreiT DfmtHion fir. Ilia rr ialtt im th tbe of (.'hsome ComiibuBU, wrl m all Umm Atrmnm miliar t Ut riMAUOU. imini bo mmumlij Iron Um Tafet&b aingatah AG EXTS Y AN TEDSMS cr publinhed. Sond 'or circulars and our extra terms toAin nt. XATIOVAb PUBLISHING CO, Chica go, 111. or bt. .Louis .va. r'OJSTAST EMPLOYJTEJiT, At home., Male or j t emaie. ua week warranted. No capital required. Particulars and valuable sample Eentf.ee. Address, with 6c return stamp, C Boss, WilUanasborgh. N. Y. A Barrel of IVloney .Made lv c ur Aircnts. Carl Pretzel's Illustrated WctTi;- rplen Offei CHI 33 TVE of Tns LOCOEVIOTIVE. By M. IT. FORXET, Mechauicai. Esgijibeb. A hsndsomelv-bonnd volnmo of fi0T paces, contain- lmr i")cnrravinCT. A complete manual for engineers. Price tZ. SO. by mail, postpaid. Address the pnblisn- ers. Tub Haji.boxo Oa-zet rn, i uroaiiwav, new York, or A. . kklmmmt. 7 v jacKon t-tret-u, vuiu(.o. v clilcaco. J.:10a year, bplee it satire. .1-1 Premium J.ist. lhe oest tenna ever one red .-r,t. iS MP I. km akd tiirruu BEE. AGENTS WAXTLD EVERY WHhKt The choice In the world Imoortt rs' ni ices lare- est Company in America-staple articlo-pleascs everyoooy-trane incrcainii-DC8v inducement! don't waste time send for Circular to KOlitlu WEiXfi. 43 Vesey St. Kew York. P. O. Box 1237. TEA TJIFI.ES. snoT-ccxs. PISTOL T"iB ill1 '-f' r -rarcgjii RETOLVEES, Of ibt and ererr triad. Send sfamn r-. !.. iMtm rra t lVr.tra M ri mi -.. piiTsBuaea. pa. FREE! AMERICAN Specimen Copies of the best Agri cultural Paper In tbe world. IS Iowa and Nebraska FOR SALE BY Tie Bdisstaa I Missouri Eire: L R. Co., On 10 Tears' Credit, at 6 per cent. Interest. 05E MILLION ACRES in imYA and SOUTHERN nrFlaMlfMatrr la the World to Comklaa FMtHUG mm SIOCK-BAISWti. Products Will Paj fur Land and Improvements Ion; Before the Principal Becomes JJoe, LARGK DI5COCSTS FOR CASH. The so-called destitution In Nebraska lies In the far western region, bcyoud. tba lauds of the B. & M. R R Co w flTToT circulars that will describe fully these land and tbe terms of sale, apply to or address JSurlinpton. Iowa, for Iowa Lands, Or Lincoln, Neb., for N ebraska Lands. TABLE KNIVES AND ORIGINALLY SI'Eio'Tj j JjoT-iT-iAll For advertising in an .- newspaper before seelnil my new catalogue of '- PKK ATI R 1,ITS. Address 8. P. BANROHN, 114 Monroe-it ,Chi aifo.Ill. DO YOUR OWN PRINTING! OlfBLTY PRINTING PRESS. For Prof railonal and J mil tear Printer, airhooU, orietlr. Alan iit'nrturcrs, Merchants, and others it is the BEST ever lni-ei.le.1 lil.OOO lf "! Ten styles, Prioes frfnp S.UO t-o 180.00 ' S B EN J. O, WOODS UUI kjtot n nq mH0 dealers in all kinds of Printing Mtf Kill 49 Ji euertu ou iswr bcixl Mump fur Catalogue.) 0) llrlsfoll.rhurfhrtilisii, . Nrf f;rocrr, A. IWitlorti, Ma., H'lV: -'1 tie demand lur your Kimm lu- cre?eft rapidly. Never cooii'lain. Tones, Ftnnrr A: Co., WiHturre,lti..&au: "Have sold volir f-'MOi if S'l CM'" Ut tTftdO. It never flle.l to tftte (HiliOtpe-tlotl." ltljrcest thliiK to rUe emi ever Oreatent thing to pel I ev knew. Many valuable conk tne recipes eot tree. Send at once lorClrrular to FII 1!. f 2 VT7 A r l 2170 Duane St. NeiT York. farr.iges.Ligl.t Buggies, Sleighs I arm, freight, SPEIKO J , V. COQTJILLA11D WAGONS. ApiMictUloa SOUTH BEND. IND. Pc-ell'i Stir Wood Fnaps! Waukegan Farm Pumps, Wooff Eave-Trough Tubing. 11- If von want the ttrnr of tlieae art Clew, po to your Hardware or Acrlcul tural implement r-torea. u im-v t ut Ween them, or will not tret th r.e vim. aeml direct to the Kiietorv Catn'oirues nnd j'rlc Lints mailed upon application to .,, UM FI Habit Cured A certain and sure cure, without Inconvenience and at home. An antidote that stands purely on Its own merits. Send for my quarterly magazine, (il cMt you nothing.) containing certificates of hundreds thai have been permanently cured. I claim to n"' discovered and produced the riRST, OBiolXAt. Ak. OXLY UIUI CUBE FOR OPIUM EATlJfO. DR. S. It. COLLIS. Lr. Porta. In1 BLACK HILLS HO! F,E PTOw?n Every description of Tents for -1 Hunters, i'liotoKiapucrs, rairs, f!h shows ami ornamental purposes. Mexican sca-srriiss iiamniocKs. r'lapH, Banners, etc. fceiid lor cir cular. G. K. KowTKRjSoN &CO.. 4: ;,Ui ket-bt., Chicago. Touts to hire. 1III?IO I'OOKS!-Chromos; S01 pnpea ln- J tcrestinK reairimr. Price lOsnd S3 cents each, hend Cifcu. btlfcKY uui) ce iu., ciucag j 4" J tcrestinK for circulars Mailed Free on Receipt of Postage Stamp. VOL. V. BURNETT'S TABLE OF CONTENTS. Q in part. CAtrSDAR, 18rs. Cbawoks or THS Moox 1D MoKJUltO AJtO Kvkxiso Plassts, lr5. Fci.fPSKS. 1875. Lanouaob of Fi.owkks. poktical skhtiukts. Cultivation or Srnmo Flowers. CaPTIOX TO IIOITRKKErPKHS. Carr or Plants la tiik Parlor. VaiTED States Postal Regulations. Language of Flowers ENLARGED AND IMPROVED. JOSEPH BURNETT & CO., Bcs.CN. NORTH AMERICAN LiiiJiriUiW V W Y" r 41 "B-k I ITf r or PHILADELPHIA AXD CHICAGO. The Jlost Extensive I.ttrhU nir.x-Iiod Man a factory In the n orld. VTe manufact ure daily livn feet of the bei- kinds of Light Hint; kouhIu uae Ve also manu facture n xl u res of every variety, i n ! ndi n ir calva- nized braces of all kinds; also V:inc, Arrows. '.itli and 1'ointa of the best qual ity, which we sell at low rates. We can shin roods by the iai-kage or car oad. e carry a stock Of not leas than a million feet at our Chi cago hone, and can fill orders for any amount at once. be Bra, UXXTER & CO., El h-2 St. CHICAfiO. 0 r D fi MA a - o m B M jj eS f l I LA STIC BUSS. HI Tub. ELASTIC TKUS8 ASO H'FPOKTKIC la now s u p er sed I n fr all others, being adopted everywhere by the lead intr phvsW-iana, surpeons, druiiKfHts,army and navy, hospitals, gyuiuafeiuiua, elc., etc. Then ueeesaand univer sal satisfaction they have plven, as well as the preat number of radical cure they have etlected, has tit monxtraUil the fact that rup. ture can be nxreli rureil without sulleriiiKor annoy ance, and irithoiit th. aunijer of inritrrtrifi fiptnalln. enf. or lliratyxi. ofien canned by the severe pressure of Metal Trusses and bupporlers. It is the only sure cure for Hernia, as It is the only Truss In use that will hold the rupture securely In all positions in which the body can be placed. It will perform radical cures when all others fail. It can be worn with eae and comfort w hen no spring truss can be used. When once adjusted, no motion of the body or accident can displace it. These instruments l.ave the unqualified appror.al of the most eminent practitioners in the pro fession. From the nnmerous testimonials la our possession We append the following: 'After the experience of months, patients testify strontrly to its ejlrttrr, as well a to the tae and frei dom from Inconvenience with which the instrument is worn. 'With superior advantages, thn Kl'ttir. J rut possesses in a high degree ALL requisites and qualifi cations rUiimrd for other Inventions. I have no hesi tation in regarding It as an important means for the relief and cure of Hernia. J, M. CATiXOCnAX, M. D.. "Kx-nealth Officer of the Port of New York, Fur- geon-in-CUiel of Jiew York State Hospital," ctc,etc. Gko. V. norsit, M. P., Pup't Elastic Trnss Co. : iiear Sir Alter sutlering for thirty years, in turown person, from the use of every form of Metallic Truss procurable in this country and In Europe, I, two years ago, applied your KlwOc Tru, and since that time I have experienced comfort and satisfaction, and been taught'the truth, that the Elastic Truss Is the only In strument that should be used for the relief and cure of Hernia: and now, after more than thirty years' con tinuous practice, and having adjusted many hundreds of Trusses (and for tiie last twenty months yonrs ex clusively), I gratefully declare it to be my deliberate opinion that your Eiaulic Tru Is the only one enti tled to the confidence of the public: that elasticity la the only powerat all adapted to the requirements of a Truss or iSupporter, and am convinced that yo'ir El'in tic TV' actually cures a large proportion of all cases to which it Is applied, not only among children. lmt In nnmerous casts ulthin my own know letlge of patient from 50 to75 years of age. 11. liriiXIIAM, M. I., Prof, of Anatomy and burgery,N. 1. K. Med. College. Beware of cheap and worthless Imitation K'sstic Trusses, which some parties advertise and sell, fraud ulently representing that they are manufactured by the Elastic Truss Co. These Trusses are sent bv mall to all parts of the country. fctttUiractlon guaranteed in ail cases. e- rore pnrcnasing any omer, write lor ucscnpiivo cir cular ( r KEk. J to the ELASTIC TRUSS CO., 683 1JHOADAVAY, SEW YORK, Dr. ?. Waller's Calironila Yin- e?ar MMers aro a purely Vcpetubl preparation, raado clilcflv .''ori -J(J tiro herbs found on tliO iWci " jancs or the Sierra Nevada mountains of l'-ior-nia, tho medicinal properties of whit-V aro extracted therefrom without tho usJ of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked, '-What is tho canso of tin unparalleled success of Yinloak Hit ters?" Our answer 1, that they rcmovo tho cause of diseaso, and tho patient re covers his health. They aro tho preat blood purifier and a life-fiivins principle, a perfect Kenovator and Invigorator of tho system. Never before in tho history of tho world has a medicine been pomnonnrlivi TiossPSHinff tllO feill.11 liable qualities of Vinkgak Bitters in hcaline thu 6ick of every diseaso man is heir to. They are a gentlo Purpativo as well as a Tonir. relicvirifr Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver anil Visceral Orgain, in Bilious Diseases. Tho properties of Dn. tvaikf.u'3 Vinegar Bittkrs aro .Aperient. Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritions, Laxative. Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Jjudonlic, Altera., live, and Anti-Bilious. Graf (Tul Thousands proclaim Vin egar Hitters tho most wonderfal In Tigorant that ever susUlned the sinking Bystem. No Person can tako these Bitter according to directions, and remain Jong unwell, provided their bones aro not de stroyed by mineral poison or other meam, and vital organs waatcd beyond repair. Billons. Remittent and Inter mittcnt FCTCrs, winch are ao preva lent in tho valleys of our great rivcrJ throughout tho United Staf en, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, MiBiwmri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red, Colorado, Krazos, Rio Grande", Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoko, James, and many others, witli their vast tributaries, throughout on entire country during tho Summer aJui Autumn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual heat and dryness, aro invariably accompanied by extenaivo de rangements of tho stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon theso vaiious or gans, i3 essentially necessary. Thcro is no cathartic for tho purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove tho dark colored viscid m.atter with which tho bowels aro loaded, at tho same tiruo Btknulating tho secretions of tho liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of tho digpstivo organs. - Fortify the bofy ngawi.st (HsrMSO by purifyiDg all its fluids with Vinkoar Bitters. No epidemic can tako hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Ilcad acho, Pain in tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of tho Stomach, Dad Tasto in tho Mouth, Kilious Attacks, Palpita tation of tho Heart, Inflammation of tho Lungs, Pain in the region of tho Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp- 1 toms, aro tho offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment. Scrofula, or King's Evil, Wbifd Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Nock, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affect-Jnfl, Old Sores, Eruptions of tbe Skin, Soro Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitution Dis eases, Walkeb's Vinegar Litters hava shown their great curative powers in tho moBt obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases o the Dlood, Liver, Kidneys and I-ladde these Bitters have no eoual. Such Dkeasef are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. rcrsous en gaged in Paint3 and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-settcr3, Gold beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of WALKEa's Vin egar Bitters occasionally. ForSkin Diseases, Eruptior.s, Tet ter, Salt-ltheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, discoloration s of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever namo or nature, are literally dng tip and carried out of the system in a short timo by the usa of theso Bitters. Tin. Tape, and other Worm, lurking in tho system of so many thousands, are etloctually destroyed ana removed, i. o system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an thelminitlcs will free the system from worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints in younc or old, married or eingle, at the dawn of wo manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influenco that improvement w soon perceptible. Cleanse llio Yiuatea jhoou when ever yon find its impurities bursting through tho skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when yon find it obstructed and sluggish in tho reins ; cleanse it when it i fonl ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep tho blood pure, and the health of tho eyetcia will follow. 11. II. McVHIVA I,T) A CO, Dm'-ir.BtJ and Gen. A Lts., Snn Francisco, Cnlifnrn!, ad cor. of Wnehinirlon and Charlton Sts., N. 1 Sola toy nil lruggtta nou lhh.cii. O t oeiEUTirD bt riNi k R- B- PALMER'S Star well Augor, Ptnted May 5, lVl. rraatc. to Hwr. Ancblm ft t Noll. mmrU. Wells 50 ft. Deep Sunk in 4 Hours. Can bore 5U0 feet deep If nTpary, Whiie it U I nejfualed in iilfnf Weill Through Jeavi lkMtM of (uicitand. It ! the rh"apct and must perfect Well Aunr vrr Invented. O iiif to the rapid! jr-lnrrfwInR dcmnnl for our Auger we have lx--n compcll." to remove in r manufart.ir' from CI mrolj.-n to CIiicaj'M. 111., wlir-rcwe are Miar fur prrparrd to f II all order prompt !v. Hioiir.NT Tmixo.MA i. Ki it.inrr. Hefore lnvpotlnir In anr other AiiKem, end for our new iiluHtraicd Catalogue. Mark the deception of a party hy fli! name of. Ill, lio fuiiowiiK uamrmr adv.-rTMntr. iiIko In hlj rlrrn'mn .n,i a he la the orlcinal Invcnl ir of his own Aiier. li t niiiv he the cane. But hlii ohjeet In phmnir a trw nt, of our. a annertor amrer. In hia tulverto-cn.er.t. i t' miR'ead the people and draw rorropondence. lfe had an B'urrr that was o wiirililf lunt we wcto lifilln-d to present acorrert rut cf th fame o th public, we would not ut-e the cut of oi " e diire n .i inaniifa.-ture. This la a ntatt'-r we c.tre hut l.rfle rMiiit, onlv we dewire to pre-.erit ImcTh and t'UTcSv rotect lun'n-ent people from Imposition. Kr full xplanatioa Bend for our New Knbrpi 'l IVrstmil Catalog uo. NTAIC 1VKI,I, Al t.Kft CO., r-o. ooj jsouiu lauaj isireet, Ll.xao. XiU AND FORKS OF ASB CIRIDS. EXCLUSIVE MAKERS OB" rtSimB taWa; FARM JOURNAL. Sixteen tarKe Ia jrea for only TS cent a per year. Save your money. Specimen Copies free to a.iyaldres. send iotai t am to IV fj JO.IC lOiCUV, vuav. Yon win like the rmner. JUST THE BOOK you C PC N MOVET TS IT SI RE t Jurt out Useful, Handsome, Cheap. Sella everywhere. A rare chance. Also, New Maps, Charts,&c. Onr new chart. CHRISTIAN OR Ci'M-BPiendid auccea.ci n cinnati price ame aa X.York.JPend rr terrnato E.C. B Bl DO 8 Barc lay St., X.T., n W.4th bt.,Ctn.,0. 1,1 -rei..t. nrtha P.t.nt Irotr" or Celluloid Knife. VZ Street, Xew V The most Dnrible WTjtf e TTan- . Always call for the "Trade nted and sold hr eil dealerB In ork. PIERCE WELL AUGER tv-wp" TofTrr fl.Ofiato ftifpne that m IIT Ti-rvfn:r rompH with ttu-m f n twin? m JA-in h wll, thmnrh t -loii ni r.'t Con, n't la takloff Up nt fnw-ln- nonMfm Rt.rf wr- n!nn 1. ril.Hli:, BloamlIrM, lmt, THE FAVORITES. FAMILY PV(MIITE. ) Title M.WI KACT1 IHIU' I'AVOniTE.; In.li.-ato ukm:kai. k.woicitk. j i m-. i or full Information resoci 'inir our Ckv! or fi ki n defor ame. andrc V1;KI KV'Ii 11 1. HIM? I O'.Ii'A. Y. nt 1 1 a rt lurd, Conn., cr our .branch Oiuoea In leading Ciuea. MV T?T ft It will only mat yoa a fo.lal an! It ft I ' I II w ra'tlnilais. alit yon ran av. mutiry l-r r'-l-Elflll tlnr )our trpda in l-ah. c.i. I. '.. J mU U YJ K . . Kprrlal Trrm I. broUr. JAS. H.MORRIS tbiM-rr.or to V. B. ItKKf KON , rt h ilr n4 ("KLIM, IMI-I rWKS'lrl. L Etc, LtC, 23 O aUlclU t klcaira. A. M K. 301- B. f. K. runic PAPER la Printed with IXK manorscttiredTiy To. B. Ia5eCo!Ti31 Dearborn 6 .Chicago.